I'd like to install Ubuntu 6.10 on the partition instead of the Mandriva, how do I go about this?

Thanks,

Mei

xpromisex

02-18-2007 01:05 PM

If you want to use the partition again - just format the partition with some partitioning software (Parted, cfdisk, fdisk, gparted, PartitonMagic etc.) and install Ubuntu on the newly formatted partition. Make sure that you back up first though.

saikee

02-18-2007 01:31 PM

I would just tell the installer to install Ubuntu over the same partitions of Mandriva and format them before the installation. However not many Linux newbies known where their Linux are or wish to find out.

johngreenwood

02-18-2007 01:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by saikee

not many Linux newbies known where their Linux are or wish to find out.

How could they not know where it is?

meigwil

02-18-2007 02:55 PM

Thanks for your replies guys.

I'm running the live CD, and tried the install, but the only options I was given were:

repartition one current partition (hda2)

delete the whole hard disk

create new partitions

Any ideas?

Thanks again,

Mei

saikee

02-18-2007 03:04 PM

Quote:

How could they not know where it is?

From the information so far need I say more?

benerivo

02-18-2007 03:40 PM

Those options you were given seem strangely limited. Try booting in to XP and deleting the partitions that Mandriva is on. I think you can do this from the Computer Management window, then go to Disk Management option. See this pic for an idea of the bit of XP i mean...http://www.microsoft.com/library/med...management.gif

Then delete the partitions that Mandriva is on. There will be at least two - one will be the main Mandriva partition and one will be the Linux Swap partition. XP will proabably refer to them as unknown partitions, and they will probabaly show up to the right of the C: drive from that pic above.
Once deleted you will have empty space. Run the live cd again, and hopefull you will now have an option for installing on to the unused space you have just created.

saikee

02-18-2007 03:58 PM

If only hda2 is reported Mandriva may have been installed into it and using "edit" option would be the easiest and quickest because we don't want the swap to be deleted.

One way to find out is while loading Ubuntu, drop into the terminal and do a

Code:

sudo fdisk -l

To see how many partitions with Type 83 for native Linux, Type 82 for swap and Type 7 for XP.

If a user is to create or delete partitions for Linux it is better to use the partitioning tools in Linux and Ubuntu is an excellent Live CD.

meigwil

02-18-2007 04:53 PM

The Mandriva boot loader shows 5 partitions. Two Windows, two Linux and a failsafe. I'm not sure what that one is.

Are there tools on the Live CD to manage the partitions? It's Ubuntu version 6.10.

Thanks again,

Mei

johngreenwood

02-18-2007 05:51 PM

The entries in the bootloader are not partitions, for example Mandriva and failsafe would boot from the same partiton, but failsafe would boot differently, but I'm not sure how. To see a list of partitions use

I continued with the installation program, choosing to manually edit the partition table.

I've chosen to leave hda1 and 2 alone, put / (root) on hda5, the swap on hda6 and /home on hda7.

I'll get back with the results.

Mei

johngreenwood

02-18-2007 06:25 PM

OK then, good luck.

saikee

02-18-2007 07:18 PM

It will work.

Partitions are partitions. Just make sure they are formatted first.

Apart from the swap I normally use just one partition for a distro.

meigwil

02-18-2007 07:19 PM

Well, I think I managed to install the OS ok, but I didn't choose to reformat the /home partition (hda7).

After I switch on and boot, I put in the username and password and get this warning message:

Quote:

User's $HOME/.dmrc file is being ignored. This prevents default language and session information being saved. File should be owned by user and have permissions. $HOME directory should be owned be user and not writable by other users

.

After I click OK, there's a pause, and an error message that says something like:

Quote:

Your session lasted less than 10 seconds. There is probably an error.

and gives

Quote:

home/mei/.gnome2/ could not be created

.

I poked around using the command line, and the home directory contained the old users from the Mandriva installation. I removed them and created a new /mei directory, but still the same.

Should I reinstall and reformat the partition? Or can I fix this manually?

I'm back on the live CD now.

Thanks,

Mei

johngreenwood

02-18-2007 07:39 PM

Maybe you could try

Code:

chown -R /home/mei

Does your distro have useradd?
useradd asks where you want your home directory and if it exists, asks if you want to chown it. I use this and have never had a problem.